Panorama of India: A Journey Through the Archive 12A

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In this specially curated programme selected from the BFI National Archive, South West Silents presents an unparalleled collection of rare films of pre-Independence India, from the earliest days of Indian cinema.

From the oldest surviving film of India, Panorama of Calcutta (1899), showing the ghats of Varanasi, to the glorious Tins for India (1941) which finds poetry in the kerosene can, directed by Bimal Roy, one of Indian cinema's greatest directors, these films are being made accessible to audiences in the UK and India for (largely) the first time.

See them on the big screen with us here at Cinema Rediscovered ahead of the newly digitised online collection of 300 films being made accessible to audiences via the BFI Player in August.

Presented in partnership with Asian Arts Agency with a live accompaniment by pianist Stephen Horne.

With an introduction by curator Ros Cranston (BFI) and followed by an informal Q&A